I’m not sure what to call this. It’s a proxy handler that watches the dirty state of an object. I don’t know why, but I’m kinda proud of this. It also has the ability to ignore fields. The main goal is to have a mechanism to indicate if you should save an object or not. In other words:

It’s time to break radio silence. I’m mostly doing this because of something I heard in an interview from the owner of the Drudge Report said on Info Wars. Go ahead point your fingers, call me whack-a-doodle.

Today I learned an easy way to do prime factors from my son. We were working on his homework. We’ll build a prime factor tree to accomplish this. I know a lot of you already know this stuff, but I don’t think I learned it in school, and if I did. I have forgotten it.

In case you don’t know what a prime number is, it’s a number that can’t be divided into any other number and get a 0 remainder.

I believe prime numbers up to 13 are.
0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13

However we aren’t going to use the first 2 because 0 and 1 can be divided into anything. We’re trying to find the primes from 2 to 13.

Every once in a while my machine runs stuff in the background, like backups, db dumps and whatnot. This obviously causes performance issues at times, but among other things I don’t want to shutdown during these processes.

So I created a simple status icon to warn me if one of those processes were executing so I wouldn’t shutdown the machine, and it also will disable hibernate/suspend.

In a previous post I wrote a bandwidth monitory in php. It was running about 300k (on my laptop it was < 100k), and figured it was time to test out my python foo.
This version also displays a line similar to this at the top of your terminal window:
eth0:RX:600b TX:944b Av:77b eth2:RX:0b TX:0b Av:0b